Sunday, February 26, 2012

The Five Best Offers for Rick Nash: Toronto Maple Leafs

Whenever there is a star player in the rumor mill Leafs
Nation immediately begins to buzz, speculating (or dreaming) about how Brian
Burke will trade some third liners, mediocre prospects and a bad contract to
make the star a Leaf. Most of the time I put very little stock in the Leafs
chances of making a major deal, but in this case I believe there is substance
to Burke being able to acquire Rick Nash.

What makes this situation different? Three factors; Columbus
is rebuilding making them a motivated seller, Nash wants out and will approve a
deal to Toronto, and Toronto desperately needs some size scoring and
leadership.

With the philosophical ideals all in alignment, the salary
cap and player exchange also needs to make sense. Let’s look at the Cap
implications first.

Toronto is
currently up against the cap with just under $1.5 million in available cap
which gives them about $6.7 million in deadline cap space according to Cap
Geek. Assuming a roster player or two from Toronto
are involved in the deal, there is room for Nash this year. The trouble though
is with only 16 players under contract for next season the Leafs are already at
$51 million, and with CBA uncertainty who knows what the cap will be. That
means if Toronto does land Nash
either by the deadline or in the off-season they will likely need to clear some
cap space. There are plenty of contracts on the Leaf roster that could become
sacrificial lambs such as Colby
Armstrong ($3 million), Clarke
MacArthur ($3.25 million), Matt
Lombardi ($3.5 million), and Mike
Komisarek ($4.5 million). All these players have varying interest and some
are more moveable than others. The return for these players in trade may be
limited, but the cap room could be made.

Jake Gardiner

Now I am certainly not suggesting Burke is going to trade
Armstrong and Komisarek for Nash. But what players would Columbus
covet from the Leafs enough to part with Nash? Scott Howson has let it be known
he wants a roster player of significance, a top prospect or two and a first
round draft choice. Elliotte Friedman reported on CBC that with Columbus
recently acquiring Jack Johnson the
focus for a roster player has become a forward. Assuming Phil Kessel and Joffrey
Lupul are not going to be included the next best option is Mikhail Grabovski. Grabovski is set to
become an unrestricted free agent this July so unless there is a change in his
status Columbus would not look at
him as a long term asset or viable option. That leaves Nikolai Kulemin and Clarke MacArthur, both are good players, but
both are not producing as well as the previous season. If the forward position
is not a sticking point for Howson, the best roster player option is Luke Schenn. If Toronto
was using either MacArthur or Kulemin as the roster player in the deal the
prospects will need to be very impressive! The most impressive rookie the Leafs
have had in a long time is Jake Gardiner.
Gardiner has played the second most minutes as a rookie defenseman in the NHL this
year second to Ottawa’s Jared Cowen. Gardiner has been playing
big minutes and in key situations. He is a fluid skater, carries the puck with
confidence and has a high hockey IQ. After Dion
Phaneuf, Gardiner is the teams’ best defenseman, and on some nights he has
been the best! After Gardiner the leafs have prospects Nazem Kadri, Joe Colborne, Matt Frattin, Korbinian Holzer, Greg McKegg,
and Brad Ross. Put it all
together and what are the Leafs offering?

The deal would go in either one of two directions and hinges
on which defenseman of either Schenn or Gardiner is involved. Having Schenn as
the roster player and Gardiner as the prospect would not work as it is too much
defense for Toronto to sacrifice.
That means there are two potential options here. Variations on either one of
these scenarios; Kulemin, Gardiner, Kadri and a first round pick, or; Schenn,
Kadri, Colborne, and a first round pick. Howson would prefer the Gardiner
option, while Burke would prefer the Schenn offer.

Luke Schenn

Are either or both offers good enough to beat out the
competition for Nash? One factor working in the Leafs favor is their first
round pick will be well before the New York Rangers, the other favorite in the
Nash sweepstakes. Can Burke and Howson agree on one or the other? Even if Nash
is not traded by the deadline on the 27th the rumors and speculation
will continue through to the summer and heat up heading into the draft.